The plaque-maker who won a coin
In 1973 the U.S. Treasury did something it almost never does: it asked the public to design the nation's money. The country's 200th birthday was coming, and the backs — the reverses — of the quarter, half dollar, and dollar were up for grabs. Anyone could enter.
Jack L. Ahr was not the kind of artist anyone expected to win. Born in 1931, he was a Korean War veteran who had studied at Bowling Green State University, the John Herron Institute of Art in Indianapolis, and the American Academy of Art in Chicago. By the early 1970s he was a commercial artist, and in 1972 he opened his own small firm — Jack Ahr Design and Sales, in Arlington Heights, Illinois — turning out awards and plaques for local businesses. He was, in the truest sense, an outsider to the world of coins.
The contest opened on October 23, 1973. By the time it closed, roughly 900 designs had poured in from across the country. A five-judge panel assembled by the National Sculpture Society narrowed the field of 884 entries down to twelve finalists, and then to three winners. In March 1974, the quarter went to Jack L. Ahr. The prize was $5,000.